Tag Archives: 3e RPIMa

Calling in

Um, U.S. Marines or possibly Army Alamo Scouts in the Pacific circa 1943-45?

Nope, the above are French paratroopers of “Ancien du 3,” the famed 3e BPC (Bataillon de Parachutistes Coloniaux) somewhere in Indochina in December 1952. Note the USGI surplus frogskin/duck hunter camo, the M1 Carbines, M1 steel pots, and the SCR-536 “handie talkie” radio, which had even less range than the Carbines. The only Gallic items in the image that give the paras away are the muzzle of a 7.5mm MAS-36 rifle to the left and the OF37 grenades on the belt of the para to the right. Of note the MAS carrier also has a slung M1A1 Carbine. 

The photo was snapped after the assault on Na San Base 24, with the battle-weary paras extracted after seven hours of vicious combat.

For those curious, the cadre of what was to become 3e BPC was formed in Vannes, France on 8 January 1948 and then shipped to Indochina where it was fleshed out with local drafts and remnants of other units to become the 3e BCCP (3e bataillon colonial de commandos parachutistes) in Saigon in November. Renamed the 3e GCCP (3e groupement colonial de commandos parachutistes) in 1950 and disbanded due to losses, 3e BCCP was reformed in 1951 from a cadre sent from Saint-Brieuc the redesignated the simpler 3e BPC on 28 May 1952, six months before the above image. It served notably in the battles of Dong-Khé, That-Khé, and Na-San.

July 6, 1952 – French Indochina. Preparation of paratroopers of the 3e BPC before boarding on a Dakota aircraft at Bach Mai Airport. Réf. : TONK 52-146 R1 ECPAD/Defense

Dissolved upon the end of the French involvement in Indochina (with its all-Vietnamese companies– 3e and 23e compagnies Indochinoises Parachutistes— transferred to form the core of the new Vietnamese airborne unit) 3e BPC was reformed once again in 1955 for service in Algeria, based at Sidi Ferruch, then redesignated the 3e RPIMa (3rd Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment) in 1958.

Shifting its garrison to the castle of Carcassonne– in metropolitan France for the first time in its existence– in 1962, the current 3e RPIMa has since then served in Chad (several times), Lebanon, Djibouti, Central Africa, New Caledonia, Togo, Gabon, Rwanda, Iraq, Zaire, all over the former Yugoslavia, and the Congo.

The regiment’s motto is “Être et durer” (“to be and last”) and it carries the names of 477 paratroopers lost in battle since 1948 on its roll of honor.

25 Years On: Operation Amaryllis

During the opening stages of the horror that was the Rwandan genocide, the French moved in with a muscular response that, sadly, had too narrow a focus to make a difference for the local Rwandans.

Opération Amaryllis- 1994, French paras of 3e RPIMa deployed from the CAR to Rwanda for a week on a non-combatant evacuation operation (NEO) mission, now 25 years in the past. Note the FAMAS rifles

Sparked by the dual April 1994 assassination of Rwandan president Juvénal Habyarimana and Burundian president Cyprien Ntaryamira, both Hutu, in the same aircraft shootdown, the respective Rwandan and Burundi civil wars kicked into overdrive with violence aimed at Tutsi tribe members.

Two days after the shootdown, some 500 French paratroopers based in the nearby Central African Republic, consisting primarily of members of the 3e Régiment de Parachutistes d’Infanterie de Marine (3e RPIMa) but with some members of the 8eRPIMa and artillerists of the 35e RAP (Régiment d’Artillerie Parachutiste), were deployed to Rwanda on orders from Paris to affect a non-combatant evacuation of French and allied nationals.

8e RPIMa Paras, note the FAMAS and its corresponding bayonets. Also, the para on the right has an AKM bayonet on his belt as well in addition to his Vuarnet sunglasses. 

Overwatch by a 3e RPIMa marksman with a distinctive French MAS FR-F2 rifle. Despite the anchor insignia on his beret and the regiment’s “Marine” designation, they are an Army unit, with the nautical references being a throwback to their colonial roots in 1948 Indochina as the 3e BCCP. French colonial troops always sported an anchor as marine “overseas” units. 

A scout from 3e RPIMa with his Peugeot P4, watching a route for a convoy through Kigali in Opération Amaryllis. Note the suppressed HK MP5SD

Lead by Col. Henri Poncet, 3e RPIMa’s commander, the light battalion-sized force managed to evac some 1,417 people– including 445 French– to Bujumbura in Burundi and Bangui in the CAR within a week.

Dubbed Opération Amaryllis, the mission was a success when judged by its immediate tasking, but history, sobered with the fact that an estimated 1 million Tutsi perished in the ensuing genocide as the French beat feet, has left that benchmark somewhat hollow.

Similarly, the UN mission in the country, UNAMIR, which was established to help implement the Arusha Peace Agreement signed by the Rwandese parties the previous August, commanded by Canadian MG Romeo A. Dallaire, dropped its authorised strength from 2,548 military personnel to only 270 in late April 1994 as Belgium and others pulled their troops from the blue berets– showing it was not just the French who pulled stumps at the onset of the crisis in Kigali.

French paras conversing with UN-capped Belgian Paracommando during the Amaryllis evac. Note the latter’s FNC rifles.

During the opening stage of the genocide, 15 UN Blue Helmets, troops from UNAMIR, who had been protecting the Rwandan Prime Minister, Agathe Uwilingiyimana, were captured by members of the Presidental Guard. Five of the 15 were Ghanaians who were set free. The other 10 were Belgian Paracommandos shot and hacked to death by machetes after they surrendered. The Belgians subsequently left the auspices of UNAMIR, and you can note these paras are not in UN livery. 

Another look at an FR F2 rifle. Note the “cat eyes” on the back of the Belgian paracommando‘s helmet. Also, note the early kevlar fragmentation vest.

The French paras did return a few weeks later, as part of a 5,500 military personnel expedition, dubbed Opération Turquoise, near the end of the 100-day genocide, and established the so-called Turquoise Zone meant to stop the mass killings and give a safe haven to refugees. French President François Mitterrand at the time hailed the move and Radio France said that tens of thousands were saved through its efforts– although Turquoise has since joined Amaryllis on the heap of “mistakes were made” operations when judged by after-action historical documents.

For a haunting further look at the international cockup by all involved in 1994 Rwanda, read Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda, by LG Roméo Dallaire.

Notably, while United Nations peacekeepers have been deployed for more than seven decades, it was only in 1999– five years after Rwanda and four after the horrible failure in Bosnia that led to the Srebrenica massacre — that the UN Security Council issued resolutions (1265 & 1270) which put the Protection of Civilians (POC) at the heart of UN Peacekeeping. Today, peacekeepers have an actual mandate to protect civilians.